KIRKUS REVIEW

When human encroachment eliminates a
young fox’s forest habitat, it searches to find a new home.

The lone fox narrates in the first
person, beginning the story with recollections of how its family had lived
together in their forest, hunting and playing. During its young life,
encroachment has depleted the forest, leaving it fragmented. Alone, the fox wanders
through housing developments, along viaducts, and past vacant lots. Each place
reminds the fox of a particular family member: at the concrete viaduct, it
recalls playing with a sister in what used to be a stream. When it reaches the
wide freeway, the fox remembers when its father discovered a deer that had been
trapped and realizes it is trapped now, too. The fox wanders until it comes
upon construction workers who have built a highway wildlife tunnel for safe
passage under dangerous roads. Without being maudlin, author Thompson’s words
give a gentle, reflective tone to the story that addresses not only habitat
reduction, but also the difficult problem of animals and vehicles. Illustrator
Thompson’s luminous artwork adds empathy to the text and offers hope not only
for the fox, but also for many wild creatures; a sign indicating the site of a
future wildlife preserve will ease many young listeners’ anxiety.

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